Tombul Mosque
| Tombul Mosque | |
|---|---|
| Basic information | |
| Location | |
| Geographic coordinates | 43°16′22″N 26°54′51″E / 43.27278°N 26.91417°ECoordinates: 43°16′22″N 26°54′51″E / 43.27278°N 26.91417°E |
| Affiliation | Islam |
| Status | Active |
| Architectural description | |
| Architectural style | Ottoman architecture |
| Completed | 1740-1744 |
| Dome(s) | 1 |
| Dome height (outer) | 25 m |
| Minaret(s) | 1 |
| Minaret height | 40 m |
|
|
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2007) |
The Sherif Halil Pasha Mosque, (Bulgarian: Томбул джамия Turkish: Tombul Camii), more commonly known as the Tombul (or Tumbul) Mosque, located in Shumen, is the largest mosque in Bulgaria and among the largest on the Balkans.
History
Built between 1740 and 1744, it was initially located in the northeastern Bulgarian (then Ottoman) town's centre, but is now in Shumen's southwest parts as the town centre shifted. The mosque's name comes from the shape of its dome.
The mosque's complex consists of a main edifice (a prayer hall), a yard and a twelve-room extension (a boarding house of the madrasa). The main edifice is in its fundamental part a square, then becomes an octagon passing to a circle in the middle part, and is topped by a spheric dome that is 25 m above ground. The interior has mural paintings of vegetable life and geometric figures and features a lot of inscriptions in Arabic, phrases from the Qur'an. The yard is known for the arches in front of the twelve rooms that surround it and the minaret is 40 m high.[1]
References
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Tombul Mosque |
| This article about a mosque or other Islamic place of worship in Europe is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
| This article about a Bulgarian building or structure is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
Read in another language
This page is available in 9 languages
